Thursday, April 26, 2012

These are the slides from my talk on "Providing Patients with Access to their Personal Medical Records On-The-Go" at the 2nd Annual Wireless Healthcare Asia Summit 2012 in Singapore. Instead of talking about hard core tech and uber cool technologies, this time I touched upon the issues which have hurt the adoption of patient record technologies and driven the usage down, and caused consequent fragmentation of potential solutions. I strongly feel that actively driving adoption is the key to realizing the benefits of healthcare technology. And my talk was about a 3 point strategy to electronic patient records. INTEGRATE , ENGAGE AND SHARE...

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

This is a simple presentation with some ideas for any Gynecologist who may be setting up a website for them self. Medical Websites are an important first step towards promoting Information Therapy. They help creating digital identities for doctors, and start the ball rolling for Digital Medicine to flourish. All the cooler stuff eHealth, Telemedicine, EHR's, Healthcare Gaming, HealthMaps and mHealth will be easier to implement on a large scale if all doctors had digital identities. N.B. and a Disclaimer: The Health IT Plus91( http://www.plus91.in) of which I am a co-founder has an initiative called Websites for Doctors which Works hard to ensure that All Indian Doctors (a tad short of a Million Doctors) will have a Website in the years to come.How does a Website help Promote a Gynaecology practice

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

So finally Social Media has hit the spot with doctors. Its the first form of technology which Doctors have adopted worldwide on their own( without pressure, incentives or kickbacks.)

Recent statistics show that while 87% of the physicians surveyed reported using Social media for personal purposes, a significant 67% also claimed to be using it for Professional use. Social Media has ushered healthcare into an exciting world of free expression and multi faceted communication

There have also been some unfortunate cases coming to light, where doctors have been penalized for overdoing it on Social Media. Also 45 % of the organizations surveyed claimed to have no policy for Social Media. In this article we'll look at some do's and don'ts for Physicians so that they can use Facebook safely and not let it cause legal problems for themselves in the future.

2. When you talk about yourself, your cases and your peers, make sure you are not identifying your patients

3. Dont practice medicine from inside Social Networks. Avoid the common traps of responding to seemingly harmless medical questions. The ones which go like "How many days before ..." or "What do you think ...."

4. Try to avoid getting drawn into negative discussions on a public forum. On facebook you can hold a private discussion with a colleague on "How you feel your hospital needs to improve ?" in the privacy of personal messages and chats ... Avoid this on your wall..

5. Try to create a facebook page for yourself or your practice. With this in place, you can avoid having to accept friend requests from patients, redirecting them instead to like your page.

6. Dont post objectionable content. Physician or not, inebriated pictures and vulgar comments are not cool. Even if they seem to be for a particular phase in life.

7. When something objectionable is posted, accept it , apologize for it and remove it.

8. Set your Privacy Settings on various networks appropriately to safeguard your information and content. This helps you protect yourself when Rule No 1 is crossed.

DO have fun, be transparent and DO voice your views. DO provide tips on where to gain trustworthy information online and offline , DO make connections but make sure you follow the above 8 points.

Further Readings:

A Wonderful Article with Do's and Don'ts for Nurses using Social Media